Renfree is a good player who's inheriting an ideal situation. He has skilled receivers in Donovan Varner, Conner Vernon and Austin Kelly, and a Week 1 matchup against FCS opponent Elon will be the perfect chance for him to get warmed up for BCS competition.

Like Renfree at Duke, Stachitas is being broken in as the new starting quarterback for Wake Forest. Also like Renfree, Stachitas will get a shot to find his rhythm against what will likely be an overmatched FCS opponent.

Reed caught 60 passes for 711 yards last year and was long expected to be the team's feature wideout in 2010, but he has drawn the ire of new coach Jimbo Fisher lately and has since had his starting spot drawn into question. Willie Haulstead was recently moved ahead of Reed on the depth chart.

We list Parker on here not because he'd have any trouble throwing against the Mean Green, but rather because the Clemson offense will run so easily through the North Texas defense that Parker's throwing ability will be entirely unnecessary.

Jerrell Jackson will be limited in this game with a wrist injury, and Moe is the team's top pass-catcher from the slot in that case. Moe was highly impressive in the offseason, and there have been whispers that he could lead the team in receptions this year.

Finley's 2009 season was wrecked by injuries, but he should be ready to go by this game. Before the ankle troubles struck last year, Finley was off to a brilliant start, taking 22 carries for 212 yards and a touchdown against Wake Forest and Connecticut.

It's a great matchup on paper, for sure, but the issue is that Nebraska will have no need at all to pass against Western Kentucky. Running backs Roy Helu and Rex Burkhead will easily carry the offense.

Texas Tech could very well need to throw it constantly to stay ahead of what could be an explosive SMU offense, but there are better options among the Red Raider receivers than Leong, who has been dealing with a concussion lately.

Martinek normally isn't an exceptional fantasy option, but he could put up big numbers in Week 1 as Rutgers takes on Norfolk State at home. After running for 967 yards and nine touchdowns in 2009, Martinek is poised to start 2010 on a very strong note.

Battles is the third running back on the South Florida depth chart, so this is really going out on a limb. But the Bulls will be playing at home against the FCS' Stony Brook, meaning the third-stringers could be getting plenty of snaps.

Savage will probably have an easy time throwing in this game, but he probably won't throw it too many times, either. When Rutgers took on a similar opponent in Howard last year, Savage attempted only 13 passes.

Pittsburgh DST at Utah

The Pittsburgh defense should be tough this year, but it allowed 27 points on the road against Buffalo last season early in the year, and this game poses a similar threat. Except Utah is a lot better.

Bolden appears to be leading the quarterback competition at Penn State. The Nittany Lions will look to instill confidence in whoever is ultimately the starter, and that's what playing FCS teams is for.

The UNLV defense allowed 2,647 yards and 27 touchdowns on the ground in 12 games last year, so it's doubtful that Wisconsin will do much more than constantly hand the ball off to John Clay and Montee Ball.

This matchup features two high-flying offenses, as well as two less than great pass defenses. Tulsa needs someone besides Damaris Johnson to step up at wideout, and Owens is a former four-star recruit who transferred from Oklahoma to do just that.

From the same contest as Owens is Freeney, the more under the radar of East Carolina's top two receivers. With Tulsa obsessing over wherever Dwayne Harris is on the field, Freeney should get plenty of opportunities.

Ward is a good talent who should eventually put up good numbers in a traditionally productive Marshall rushing attack, but the Thundering Herd is playing against the Buckeyes. Don't even think about playing him.

The former Michigan transfer ought to do big things in Conference USA soon enough, but the Longhorns defense will make sure he does next to nothing in Week 1. Keep him on the bench until he sees North Texas in Week 2.

Allen has been a disappointment so far in his career, but few coaches get the best out of their players like Brian Kelly does. Kelly has expressed confidence in Allen this offseason, and a mediocre Purdue defense will give him a chance to show why.

After being the touchdown vulture in the Notre Dame offense the last two years, Hughes now finds himself No. 3 on the Notre Dame depth chart behind Allen and Cierre Wood. Hughes' days of (already slight) fantasy relevance are over.

Clark heads into this game not only with a great matchup, but also with recent production that rivals that of any player in the country. In his last four games of 2009, Clark totaled 406 yards and seven touchdowns on the ground.

Prince has been limited by a back strain recently and, though he heads into this game as the starter, it's doubtful that he'll be at full strength. You can find someone better while Prince recovers.

UCLA DST at Kansas State

The Bruins defense lost a great deal of talent this offseason, and it heads into 2010 with injuries limiting its best remaining players. The team's top defensive lineman, Datone Jones, is out for this game, and star safety Rahim Moore has dealt with groin and hamstring issues lately.

Florida offensive lineman Mike Pouncey recently stated that Rainey would be the center of the Gators offense. When the Gators offense takes on the MAC, that means good numbers for the center of the Gators offense.

Yes, Arkansas will score tons of points on Monroe. But Monroe sticks with Goodin at all times, as seen in last year's big losses against Texas and Arizona State, when Monroe still gave Goodin 15 carries per game.

This isn't NFL fantasy football. You have to be ready to bench your first pick sometimes, because your backups will have much better matchups occasionally. Dunbar ran for five yards against Alabama last year. We'd be surprised if he ran for more than 50 or 60 against Clemson.